PFC Controller with Multi-Function Node, Related PFC Circuit and Control Method
20210376714 · 2021-12-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02M1/0009
ELECTRICITY
H02M1/32
ELECTRICITY
Y02B70/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
H02M1/42
ELECTRICITY
G01R19/165
PHYSICS
G01R19/175
PHYSICS
H02M1/32
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A PFC circuit uses a single multifunctional node to detect an inductor current when a power switch is turned ON and a zero-current moment when the power switch is turned OFF. The power switch has a drain connected to an inductor, a source connected to a current-sense resistor, and a gate controlled by a PFC controller with the multifunctional node. A signal-integration circuit is electrically coupled between the drain and the source, to provide a multifunctional signal at the multifunctional node. The PFC controller comprises a first comparator and a zero-current detector. The first comparator compares the multifunctional signal with a first reference signal when the PFC controller turns ON the power switch, to provide over-current protection. The zero-current detector decides, in response to the multifunctional signal when the PFC controller turns OFF the power switch, a zero-current moment when an inductor current flowing through the inductor is about zero.
Claims
1. A power-factor correction circuit, comprising: an inductor; a power switch with a drain, a source and a gate, wherein the drain is connected to the inductor; a current-sense resistor connected between the source and a ground line; a PFC controller having a multifunctional node and a drive node connected to the gate; and a signal-integration circuit electrically coupled between the drain and the source, for providing a multifunctional signal at the multifunctional node; wherein the PFC controller comprises: a first comparator comparing the multifunctional signal with a first reference signal when the PFC controller turns ON the power switch, to provide over-current protection if the multifunctional signal exceeds the first reference signal; and a zero-current detector connected to receive the multifunctional signal when the PFC controller turns OFF the power switch, and to decide, in response to the multifunctional signal, a zero-current moment when an inductor current flowing through the inductor is about zero.
2. The power-factor correction circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the PFC controller further comprises a second comparator comparing the multifunctional signal with a second reference signal when the PFC controller turns OFF the power switch, to provide over-voltage protection.
3. The power-factor correction circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the PFC controller detects a signal valley of the multifunctional signal to turn ON the power switch.
4. The power-factor correction circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the signal-integration circuit includes two resistors connected in series between the drain and the source, and a joint between the two resistors is connected to the multifunctional node.
5. The power-factor correction circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the signal-integration circuit includes two capacitors connected in series between the drain and the source, and a joint between the two capacitors is connected to the multifunctional node.
6. The power-factor correction circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein the zero-current detector samples the multifunctional signal to provide a sample when the PFC controller turns OFF the power switch, and comparing the sample with the multifunctional signal to determine the zero-current moment.
7. A PFC controller, comprising: a driver for driving a power switch with a drain and a source; a multifunctional node coupled to the drain and the source via a signal-integration circuit, wherein a multifunctional signal is at the multifunctional node; a zero-current detector connected to the multifunctional node for receiving the multifunctional signal when the PFC controller turns OFF the power switch, and detecting, in response to the multifunctional signal, a zero-current moment when an inductor current flowing through an inductor is about zero; and an over-current detector coupled to the multifunctional node, for comparing the multifunctional signal with a first reference signal when the driver turns ON the power switch, to turn OFF the power switch and provide over-current protection.
8. The PFC controller as claimed in claim 7, comprising an over-voltage detector, wherein when the driver turns OFF the power switch the over-voltage detector compares the multifunctional signal with a second reference signal to provide over-voltage protection, constantly turning OFF the power switch.
9. The PFC controller as claimed in claim 7, wherein the zero-current detector samples the multifunctional signal to provide a sample when the PFC controller turns OFF the power switch, and compares the sample with the multifunctional signal to determine the zero-current moment.
10. The PFC controller as claimed in claim 7, wherein the zero-current detector sends a zero-current signal indicating the occurrence of the zero-current moment, and the PFC controller further comprises: a valley detector, for detecting a signal valley of the multifunctional signal in response to the multifunctional signal and the zero-current signal.
11. A control method for PFC, comprising: controlling a power switch with a drain and a source, wherein the drain is connected to an inductor, and the source is connected to a current-sense resistor; providing a multifunctional node coupled to the drain and the source via a signal-integration circuit, wherein a multifunctional signal is at the multifunctional node; turning OFF the power switch and detecting a zero-current moment when an inductor current flowing through an inductor is about zero in response to the multifunctional signal; and turning ON the power switch and comparing the multifunctional signal with a first reference signal to provide over-current protection and constantly turn OFF the power switch.
12. The control method as claimed in claim 11, comprising: turning OFF the power switch and comparing the comparing the multifunctional signal with a second reference signal, to provide over-voltage protection and constantly turning OFF the power switch.
13. The control method as claimed in claim 11, comprising: sampling the multifunctional signal to provide a sample when turning OFF the power switch; and comparing the sample with the multifunctional signal to determine the zero-current moment.
14. The control method as claimed in claim 11, comprising: detecting a signal valley of the multifunctional signal in response to the multifunctional signal and a zero-current signal indicating the occurrence of the zero-current moment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0005] Non-limiting and non-exhaustive embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the following drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the various figures unless otherwise specified. These drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale. Likewise, the relative sizes of elements illustrated by the drawings may differ from the relative sizes depicted.
[0006] The invention can be more fully understood by the subsequent detailed description and examples with references made to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0011] According to embodiments of the invention, a PFC controller controls a power switch connected in series with an inductor to perform PFC. The PFC controller is a packaged monolithic integrated circuit chip, having a multifunctional pin electrically connected to a signal-integration circuit, which connects to both a drain and a source of the power switch. Based on a multifunctional signal at the multifunctional pin, the PFC controller detects an inductor current through the inductor when the power switch is turned ON, and detects a zero-current moment when the power switch is turned OFF, where the zero-current moment represents the moment when the inductor current drops to about zero. When the power switch is turned OFF, the PFC controller can also provide protections against disasters possibly caused by abnormal conditions.
[0012]
[0013] Bridge rectifier BR provides full-wave rectification, to provide a direct-current (DC) input power source V.sub.IN and a ground line based on AC power source V.sub.AC-IN. Inductor L is electrically connected between input power source V.sub.IN and drain D. The combination of inductor L and decouple capacitor 201 results in a low-pass filter, making input current I.sub.IN smooth. According to embodiments, PFC controller 202 is a monolithic integrated circuit chip packaged with pins, and each pin is also a node for interconnecting electric devices. PFC controller 202 utilizes pulse-width-modulation technology to provide at drive pin DRV gate signal V.sub.G. Gate signal V.sub.G, as it controls gate G of power switch 204, turns ON and OFF power switch 204 to regulate output voltage V.sub.OUT and at the same time to make input current I.sub.IN substantially in phase with the voltage of AC power source V.sub.AC-IN, thereby achieving PFC. According to embodiments of the invention, PFC circuit 200 could operate in boundary mode, discontinuous conduction mode (DCM) or burst mode. Output voltage V.sub.OUT could supply power to loads or other power converters not shown in
[0014] Signal-integration circuit 206 is electrically connected to both drain D and source S, capable of integrating current-sense signal V.sub.CS and drain signal V.sub.D to generate multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD at multifunctional pin CS/ZCD of PFC controller 202. Signal-integration circuit 206 has a pair of resistors, R1 and R2, and a pair of capacitors Cl and C2. Resistors R1 and R2 are connected in series between drain D and source S, and so are capacitors C1 and C2. Joint 210 electrically connects resistors R1 and R2 and capacitors C1 and C2 to multifunctional pin CS/ZCD. Multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD represents current-sense signal V.sub.CS when power switch 204 is turned ON, because in the meantime drain signal V.sub.D is about the same with current-sense signal V.sub.CS. Therefore, based on the information that multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD carries when power switch 204 is ON, PFC controller 202 can acknowledge whether inductor current I.sub.L is too much and renders corresponding protection. On the occasion when power switch 204 is OFF, performing an open circuit between drain D and source S, multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD can represent drain signal V.sub.D because in the meantime current-sense signal V.sub.CS is about zero. Drain signal V.sub.D reflects output voltage V.sub.OUT when diode D1 forwards inductor current I.sub.L to output capacitor COUT, and drain signal V.sub.D starts oscillating after inductor current I.sub.L depletes or becomes zero. The moment when inductor current I.sub.L becomes zero is hereinafter referred to as zero-current moment tZCD. Accordingly, based on the information that multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD carries when power switch 204 is OFF, PFC controller 202 can detect output voltage V.sub.OUT and zero-current moment tZCD, to provide corresponding controls.
[0015]
[0016] Please reference both
[0017] Pulse-width modulator 312 generates PWM signal S.sub.PWM, and driver 314, in response to PWM signal S.sub.PWM, provides gate signal V.sub.G with suitable voltage or current to drive power switch 204. In view of the logic values, gate signal V.sub.G and PWM signal S.sub.PWM in
[0018] During ON time T.sub.ON, power switch 204 performs as a short circuit between drain D and source S. Therefore, inductor current I.sub.L and current-sense signal V.sub.CS both increase linearly over time. Because drain D electrically shorts to source S, drain signal V.sub.D is substantially equal to current-sense signal V.sub.CS, making multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD substantially equal to current-sense signal V.sub.CS if the input impedance into multifunctional pin CS/ZCD of PFC controller 202 is high. As shown in
[0019] Over-current detector 306 in
[0020] Similar with over-current detector 306, diode-short detector 308 compares multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD with diode-short-circuit protection (DSCP) reference signal V.sub.DSCP, another predetermined signal, during ON time T.sub.ON. When multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD exceeds DSCP reference signal V.sub.DSCP, diode-short detector 308 provides protection signal S.sub.DSCP to disable pulse-width modulator 312, which in response quickly turns OFF power switch 204 and keeps it constantly OFF ever since. Diode-short detector 308 is used to protect power switch 204 from conducting over-large current when diode D1 mistakenly becomes a short circuit all the time and constantly clamps drain signal V.sub.D at output voltage V.sub.OUT.
[0021] During OFF time T.sub.OFF, current-sense signal V.sub.CS is about zero because power switch 204 conducts no current, so multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD, currently in proportion to drain signal V.sub.D, can represent drain signal V.sub.D, as shown in
[0022] During OFF time T.sub.OFF, zero-current detector 302 detects zero-current moment tZCD based on multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD, where zero-current moment tZCD refers to the moment when inductor current I.sub.L drops to about 0A, as shown in
[0023] During OFF time T.sub.OFF and after zero-current moment tZCD, valley detector 304 detects the occurrences of signal valleys VL.sub.1, VL.sub.2, etc., that drain voltage V.sub.D at drain D oscillates to create, and generates signal S.sub.V accordingly to pulse-width modulator 312, which is configured to start the next ON time T.sub.ON at about the moment when the bottom of a signal valley appears, performing valley switching. Since the bottom of a signal valley means that the voltage difference between drain D and source S is at its minimum, valley switching can reduce conduction loss of power switch 204 and improve conversion efficiency. As shown in
[0024] During OFF time T.sub.OFF and before zero-current moment tZCD, multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD is in proportion to drain voltage V.sub.D, which is about output voltage V.sub.OUT, and over-voltage detector 310 checks if multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD is over high to provide over-voltage protection (OVP). Comparator 320 compares multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD with OVP reference signal V.sub.OVP. In case that multifunctional signal V.sub.CS/ZCD has been exceeding OVP reference signal V.sub.OVP for a predetermined period, timer 322 sends protection signal S.sub.OVP to disable pulse-width modulator 312, which in response constantly turns OFF power switch 204 to avoid over-high output voltage V.sub.OUT.
[0025] Accordingly, PFC controller 202, which is in form of a packaged monolithic chip according to embodiments of the invention, uses only multifunctional pin CS/ZCD to provide multiple protections, such as OVP, OCP, and DSCP, and to detect zero-current moment and signal valleys. PFC controller 202 could have a less pin number, which would make the total cost of PFC circuit 200 more attractive to manufacturers.
[0026] While the invention has been described by way of example and in terms of preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited thereto. To the contrary, it is intended to cover various modifications and similar arrangements (as would be apparent to those skilled in the art). Therefore, the scope of the appended claims should be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and similar arrangements.